Carlo Ticconi1, Adalgisa Pietropolli2, Barbara Borelli2, Valentina Bruno2, Emilio Piccione2, Sergio Bernardini3, Nicoletta Di Simone4. 1. Section of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Academic Department of Biomedicine and Prevention, University Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy. ticconi@med.uniroma2.it. 2. Section of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Academic Department of Biomedicine and Prevention, University Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy. 3. Department of Experimental Medicine and Surgery, University Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy. 4. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy.
Abstract
PROBLEM: To investigate whether antinuclear autoantibodies (ANA) could be related to the outcome of the successive pregnancy in women with unexplained recurrent miscarriage (uRM). METHODS: Circulating ANA were measured by indirect immunofluorescence in 86 women with uRM before pregnancy, repeated in the first trimester of the successive gestation and correlated with pregnancy outcome. RESULTS: Forty-one women were ANA- and 45 were ANA+ before pregnancy. No relation was found between pre-pregnancy ANA status and the outcome of the successive pregnancy. However, when these women were monitored at 7th week during their pregnancy for ANA, of the 22 ANA+ women who remained ANA+ seven miscarriages (31.8%) were observed, whereas all of the 23 ANA+ women who became ANA- had pregnancies ongoing beyond the 20th week without miscarriage. CONCLUSIONS: ANA status could have a role in uRM. Disappearance of ANA in early pregnancy could have a favorable prognostic value in the successive pregnancy.
PROBLEM: To investigate whether antinuclear autoantibodies (ANA) could be related to the outcome of the successive pregnancy in women with unexplained recurrent miscarriage (uRM). METHODS: Circulating ANA were measured by indirect immunofluorescence in 86 women with uRM before pregnancy, repeated in the first trimester of the successive gestation and correlated with pregnancy outcome. RESULTS: Forty-one women were ANA- and 45 were ANA+ before pregnancy. No relation was found between pre-pregnancy ANA status and the outcome of the successive pregnancy. However, when these women were monitored at 7th week during their pregnancy for ANA, of the 22 ANA+ women who remained ANA+ seven miscarriages (31.8%) were observed, whereas all of the 23 ANA+ women who became ANA- had pregnancies ongoing beyond the 20th week without miscarriage. CONCLUSIONS: ANA status could have a role in uRM. Disappearance of ANA in early pregnancy could have a favorable prognostic value in the successive pregnancy.
Authors: N Rosato; E Piccione; V Bruno; M D'Orazio; C Ticconi; P Abundo; S Riccio; E Martinelli; E Zupi; A Pietropolli Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2020-05-14 Impact factor: 4.996